The Crimson Blind & Other Ghost Stories
Mrs H.D. Everett was the last in a long line of gifted Victorian novelists who knew how to grip the reader through the invasion of everyday life by the abnormal and dramatic, leaving the facts to produce their special thrills without piling on the agony. 'I always know', says one of her characters, 'how to distinguish a true ghost story from a faked one. The true ghost story never has any point and the faked one dare not leave it out.' From the chilling horror of The Death Mask to the shocking violence of The Crimson Blind, from the creeping menace of Parson Clench to the mounting suspense of The Pipers of Mallory, these thrilling stories were enthusiastically received by readers and critics when they first appeared, and are sure to delight and terrify the modern reader in equal measure.
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H. D. Everett
Although this author wrote under the pen-name of Theo Douglas she was in fact a British woman- Henrietta Dorothy Everett. Born in 1851, she was the daughter of an officer of the Royal Marines. In 1869 she married Edward Everett, a solicitor. Her writing career began when she was 44 years old and over the following quarter of a century she wrote 22 books. Several of her novels were historical, set during the French Revolution and Napoleonic periods, but at least 50% of her literary output concerned the supernatural and fantastic, a genre which very popular among readers of her time and in which female authors were acknowledged to be exceptional exponents. The highly regarded novella, 'Iras: A Mystery', written in 1896, concerning a re-animated Egyptian mummy is included in this special Leonaur edition which also includes her ghostly short story collection. There can be no higher praise attributed to Everett's work than that it came under the incisive gaze and assessment of M.R. James-an undisputed master of supernatural fi ction. His own very reserved views of the works of other authors in the genre could be on occasion cutting, but of H.D.Everett's efforts he wrote, 'a quieter tone on the whole, but with some excellently conceived stories'-so a worthy encomium, indeed!. Mrs. Everett died in 1923.
Tales of Mystery & the Supernatural
Tales of Mystery & the Supernatural consists of 28 total books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.
